TIIE OMAriA tTMLY REE: SUNDAY, MX7 29, 1901. FOR SALE REAL ESTATE SEE OUR AD on page 1. bout big lots for K'O nd t"0 In our new Bluff View Addition Juat been platted. , It la part of th exposition s-rnunrla, eaat of Sherman avenne. HASTINGS & HEYDEN,' 510 511 N. Y. Life Bide. RE INSURE YOUR HOME IN THE STATE Insurance Company Of Nebraska: Home Office Room 1 N, Y. Life Bldg. FIRE, LIGHTNING. TORNADO IAME8 E. BOYD, Pre. K. A, CCDAHY, Vic Pre. LUTHER DRAKE, M Vie Pra. A. J. LOVE. Becy. and Treas. PATRON 12 1 HOMK INSTITUTIONS. INVESTMENTS On North 24th street, in food location, I tores with flats Above: rental, (72 per month. Price. tfi.SOO. On of th beet cerner on Farnam atroet, brick bullumg, gill-edge property. Price, 3ii,uu0. W. FARNAM SMITH & CO., 1330 Farnam Street. RE-M874 CHALLENGEl Soma Real Eelate firms are offering to aell acre property "for 41CO.UO and ).,u.(W that otliera are asking t-W0O and (auo.uu for." We are ottering acre property at t0.W an acie, and to prove that 4t la the eneapat aor property near Omaha we offer to buy all I, 10 or iSO-aere tract at 1150.00 that are nearer to the Omaha Postofiloe tiian oura and within one mile of the Henson car line. Alo all 6, 10 or JO-acra tracts in South-Omaha at lluO.OJ closer to the Packing Houaes than our mere tracts. TMh offer is open to all Heal Katate Brok Thls ofter la open to all Heal kietai Broker a. N. P. DODGE & CO., 1814 FARNAM STREET. MY ARTISTIC HOME The "Uem of Clifton Hill," a paradise for professional man) price cut to tz.auO; will rent tor Ja; purl down, balanoe eaay. Come, "ice it at once. 4iW Grain St. Kev. K. M. Dillon. R&-MMI NEW MODERN HOUSE 2309 CALIFORNIA ST. KOOO.OO rooms and large liali, best of plumbing and giia fixtures, lure buth room, laun dry, line ynrd, artificial stone sidewalks around house. Immediate possession nan be given. GEORGE & COMPANY Idol Farnam. KB ELEGANT HOME CHEAP Party promoted and leaving the city at Jnce offers his elegant tlo.OOO residence or 17.700. Ask us about It Immediately, HARRISON & MORTON, k. y. Lira tel. su RJjJ-M7SB TO INVESTORS OR HOMEBEEKEK8. , -A. gulden opportunity la ottered; Jut think, only 3,uu0 for the modem s-room houa at 714 N. 19th St., on the lively boulevard In the heart of the city; eaat front, large, cory rooms, large closets, pantry, bath room, good plumbing, Una shade trees, permanent walks, premises fenced, house convenient and the place homelike. Do not overlook this without giving it your Immediate attention and Investigation. PAYNE INVESTMENT CO., Flrat Floor N. Y. Ufa, Tel. 17t- . Rli-M8i0 SO TWO brand new cottages, modern eaoept furnace) one ,1.800 and the other $2,45. 6HIMEH At CHASE. Builders of Modern Houses. RX-m A MAP OF ROSEBUD reservation for th Baking. Write or call for on today. Gee Belt Land Co., 214 First Nat. bank bids., Omaha, Neb. RBMiM ACRES IN BENSON Desirable Tracts for Country Horn. Ten acres with bearing fruit, all nicely seeded to alfalfa. U.euO.OO. Five acres, soma fruit, three blocks front ear, tl.auu.0o. T Two aores on pavement, a tin garde. tract, lauO.oo. Benson & Carmichael, tU Paxton Block. RE-a IN BENSON. Good t-r house, barn, i lots, all kinds of fruits; J blocks, from car; tl.800. For term addresa M, 41, Bee, RK 17 dx IRRIGATED LANDS on Union Paclflo la Nebraska and Wyoming, (li. Uinta Irrl gallon Cov. Omaha. Neb. RE MoiiJil ll.ttt buy a 4-room modern oottage, except fur. race; tine bath and closet, art-foot lot. Will rent for (17. Near fOlh and Ohio Bis, BH RIVER, lOM N. Y. Life Bldg. RE-100-M Harrison & Morton REAL ESTATE. U2-S1I N. T. Life. Tel. SU RS-M3M ENGLISH & CO., PAXTON BLOCK. On of tr finest s-roora modera raldncs Id West Farnam di.lrlct, l&O. MUST BE SOLD. Party leaving for California aay get me any fait oner for my t-room, all modern house, not far front Mr. Korty's resident. Price sited, M.7SA Harrison & Morton REAL ESTATE, U1-8U N. Y. Life. Tel. Ill RE Hi CHKAS-Williamson Co.. u.'M oor hide RkV-ttl . ROSEBUD RESERVATION MAP, t6o. p. W, Forbes, lionasteel. B, D. RK-M2U 111 us. your property. Baker Bros. Eng. Co. s.ifi-;t DO YOUWANT TO SELL A FARM? If you want t aell a farm r ranch tell the farmers and stock raiaers about it. The beat way to reach Uiam la through THE TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER This agiioultural Meekly goes to M to bomo of lrm" and slock raisers, so If you have a good pleoc of land to aell at a reasonable iiu.e you will find a buyer among them. The ooat of an advertisement ia email 4 cent a per word la smell loe er UU per tnoh U aet In Urge type. WANTED-T0 BORROW. V WANTKl) To borrow OS tn xtaii k... munejr, ai i per cent, on rexiaencw; Oni'tha property; security ample Ad dreia M. It, be. Mis'; tl. per cent, five year; flrat mortgug good Mourtly. Addrea M . Bee. FOR SALE HORSES, WAGONS HORSES for sae; :d Kaad harneea sod v hide caeap. Maiuior Stables, tul S- lth P-l Family bora, carriage, oheap. 8am 1 Burn. P MS24 Jell (0 BUOOtEB, wagons and all kind of rigs t haif price. H. Krpe,., lth and Leaven, worth. P 8ELL1NU out bgrea, wagons, birr., at cosu Andereen-M Hard Co., l,CafHtoi, WAOONSI Delivery wagona'l Don't fall to ae them. The largest assortment in the west at wholesale prices. Johnson A Uanforth, 8. V. cor, 10th and Jone sis. P-W227 Jel4 A N1TW runabout top buggy to trade for driving horse. Sll N. 16th. P-I7t GENTLEMAN'S roaditer. years old. pacer, very speedy. 1114 Douglaa. Dletrloh & Wallace' stables. P M(9 to FOR BALE, either separate or together, N. P. Munterferlng'a rhf stnut-eorrel pucer, Dan, buggy and lmrne. Inquire Betta Proa.' barn. 16trt and Capitol ave., or room 16. Wlthnell block. P M700 VETERINARY DENTIST J. W. Boauet, 614 S. 14th. P-M701 323 FINE depot carriage, beat make and In fine condition; alo light top btigjrv. hr aeaa. ate. Addreaa M 14. Bee. P-M713 SO FOR PALF J-year-old standard bred stal lion, I not a better bred one In Ne braaka, sired by the Conqueror, 2:2; his dam Is the famous brood mare Sen tinel Bell", the dam of Manl Onward, t:l. and Phoebe Onward, t:Vi; this colt la large and atrong, a bright bay, black mane and tall; haa never been driven for peed yet. I will aell or will trade for other stock. I. E. Doty, David City, Neb. P-M7 29 FOR 8T.E New tlffi Btanhope for tim. Al'o liXi phaeton, secondhand. In good condition, $50. H. F. EDWARDS, 1&12 Howard St, P-8S4 29 IF YOU r thinking of buylna; any kind of a vehicle look for Johnson 4b Danforth's advertisement on Fourth Page. They sell at lower prices than any other dealer. P 1S3 2t FOR SALE A Blngl foot, pace, canter saddle horse, oheat nut sorrel, 7 years old, wt. 1,100; thoroughly broken all harness; thoroughbred and standard bred. Jones' stable, 1114 Dodge St. P M142 30 ' BUYING automobile, will sacrifice An coupe rookaway for tllo; runabout very cheap; rubber tires. Address M Dt, Bee. ' P Miaa i 'MEDICAL MAGNET PILE KILLER. IT CURES. At dvutfgieta, (1. HOMEOPATHIC medicines, wholesale, re tail. Sherman A McConnoll, Omaha, N -tOO DR. PRIES treats auroeefully all dlseasaa and irregularittea of worntn. from any cauae; experienced and reliable. Addreaa. with stamp, Dr. Pries, HXl Dodge si., Omaha. 8ul PRIVATE hospital during confinement; hubles adopted. Mrs. Oardsls, S21i Chai-loa Tel. A-J!JS. , SOU PRIVATE home during confinement; babies adopted. The Good Sumnrltan Sanitarium, 72X 1st ev., Counall Bluffs, la, iSi DR. HOBTETTER has removed to the S W. corner of 5:0th and Leavenworth sta. Tel. 77t. -02 Jet PRIVATE horn during confinement; babies adopted. Mrs. Dr. King, top floor, (06 N. 16th St. Tel. 1669. -til Jell LADIES Pleasant local work at home; MO paid weekly; this la no deception: writ today. Manager, 800 Como Blk., Chicago. c-04 ax LADIES Chichester's English rennyroyai ptlla are th best. Safe, reliable. Take no other. Send 4o stamps, for particular. . "Relief for Ladle," In letter, by return mall. Ask your drugglat. Chichester Cl emte! Co.. Philadelphia, w. . DR. W, HUTCHINSON, Specialist of women and ehlldran; 10 years' practice. Office, 2206 Cuming. Residence telepiion, Ih6; office, S667. DR. PRIES, German frradtiate, renowned for his aklll and experience In confine menta; cures aterillty, long standing riln easea of utarua and ovariea, cures painful, profuse, retarded or suppressed irfenstru. fttlon, recent or of long standing. Ladles who have suffered for years, hopelejie anil dejeoted, can be cured without operation or the hospital. If a personal Interview Is Impossible state your case fully, inclove tamp and answer and advice will promptly )e given. Address R. F. Pries, M. D., 1M1H Dodge St., Omaha, Neb. - LADIES When In need en& for free trial of our never falling remedy, Rellf sure and quick. Pari Chemical Co., Milwau kee. Wis. MEDICATED and electrlo hatha, 1B1B Burt at., second floor, Room 2, Mrs. navies. MITt 4x FINANCIAL A LIMITED number of first mortgage $108 gold bonde. bearing S per cent Inter est and entitling purohaaer with eaoh bond to (200 worth of atock in a gilt-edged company, can be bought for abort time only for eaah at par, or on eaay payment ' with accrued interest added; bonds are based on property worth ten times th par value of th entire Isaue. and the stock will pay a dividend of not leas than 16 per cent this year, wlrh larger one each year thereafter; thl la a legitimate, bona tide proposition which wQI stand th strictest . investigation. Alaska Gold Dredging Co., Keyston Building. Pitts- 3UF.?I 144 2t LAWNMOWERS SHARPENED C JARL, 7U So. llth Street, M-7W J 19 B. B. LAWRENCE, rot Leavenworth. 'Phone Ll7, 414 J el t P. MELCHOIR machln work a, nth and Howard. M THUe 10 FLORISTS HESS A BWOBODA. 1411 Farnam. -J7 L. HENDERSON, 1M Farnam. Send for price Hat of cut flowere and plant. ALFRKn DONAGIIUE, JR., 1607 Farnam. Tel. Wit. J15 SHORTHAND ANDlYPEWRITERS . C. VAN S ANT'S echool, TIT N. T. Lifa. 81 Neb. Bua. A Shorthand Col., Boyd theater. When You Write ' to Advertisers remerrber It only takea an extra stroke or two of th pen tn mention th fast that r4 saw the ad In The Bee ' r SEARLES 4 SEARLES Omaha. Nt. CURES 6UARAIITEE0 Quicker and for LEIt MO NEY than other SPECIALIST. Cure, all special dieti (if umo kMuey. blajltr hod UieeaM a, woutii B'tftii PaUsi rered for lile, oob every ,l ga i!G8 rOUIl ..nipiom. aoree oa body. 14 mouia, tengue, throat, balr and redrew a, (lallu.rf uuit disappear completely lorevtr. Virlffltl Vtlm ranture. larged ead llAg, pala ttt Was ot Uuie Never laila, Wuikeei atue la th wurU. teii., tituii un ir-VaiVeVi0..,"; twiy. wit aetata. laa vf vigor and ueiiglB, . . Tr.unnt by mall. 14 year OF 8UC Ck-MS-UL Ph ACTIO IN OMAUA, Cur. er ef ltl) and Luuga. 1W RAILWAY TIME CARD lltlOU ITATia IOTW AID KAItCY. Ckleag, Rl( IslaaS Pa. BAST. . . . ban. Afetve. Clilwe trHrM UmnM e I U ilNia Ckicssa IMrlKat Local e f M am a t i at rairaie prm U U m a I'M aw tn Molnoa Siprw I t l ) bll M la Ckwase rut Siaeaae - I.W rm s liM tm WIST. Mkr Meenuia Unttxt ,..aT:Staai a t M pia L(nen, Color 4 eprlase. ta- ve, Fkie 4 at a 1 M eat a l et pa T". OillferBla aa Oklakeau rim -e :it Pa el:t pm t alon PaelSo. Tk Overlana Umlted a m a I'M aat Tbe Fast Mall a I K aia a Tk California lipna a 4 JS T h Aliwitls Sicla. lIH 9 The Portian4- bloa,o gpMlal...e I N pm I H la Tka Atlantic Kapraaa t Mpa fke Cler4e laMiai AiliN pm I 4 a Chleato (paoUl ... Il:jta Llneeln. aVnirtae aad tHreats- kers Biseaea k I'M m kll 41 rw felumbei Local b I.W ra k eat Lttleago A Nerthweaterau Kaat Ckieas a 1:44 am a Till am Local Ckloaga all Xiao Mall ' a 1:14 a a I II pa k I 4 pa al(i:au pa ail m pa a l:lt aa : pa bocai eieai vr . , parlllhi Bt. Paul... pajrliibt Cbloaae .. Ualt4 Cblcaaa ... raat Cblcaio tal Ckjvace ... ....a i s, am a t W am a l ie pa a l:K) pa a 4.M pa a 1:14 pa raat at. Paul a 1:14 pa a t o am It. Paul Sipreaa , a I II raat Mall UWva Laeal Hon Our 4 pa a I 10 aia Kortnlk ana Bonaatae. a 1:01 am all 14 am t.mroln and Lous Pina e I aa bimil aa tMalwoea, Hot Sprlnaa aa4 Uneola a 1:44 pa a 1:11 pm Caatr and Wyoming anprm...4 :ie pa a 1:11 pa MaaUnia, aparior aa4 Albion.. b 1.44 pa ki:,a Iblcatra, Mllwaakee 81. Paal. Chlrase Darllxbt a 1M aa aUill am t;aicaga raat aaprasa a a:a pa a l:W pi Ovarland Umltad a 1:20 pm a 1.10 am a 1:14 pm Ua Molnaa Sxpreaa IlliaaU CeatraL Ckicage Bxpraet Cbicaav. Minnaepolls 4 I Paul Hailed Vtiineapolla Paul a T a am .a 1:14 oat all:M pa ,.a f:44 pie. .b t:M aa a I 01 am bi4:M pa Mlaaourl Paetfl. It. Loala Bxpram alo:4 am K. C. A St. Imii sUprasa all :4I pm World' ralr Spaelal a i:H a I a, pa a t 00 aa all :l aa IMeaaru (.real Vrter. It. Paul and atlanaapolln mild. a I N pa a T:ll am Si. Paul and Minnoayoiu K...a 14 am a In pa thicase Linilud a i:u pm alO:u am tklcage atirMs X wa a 4:ia pa vaanaiu ec Leaa "Cannon Ball" Ks... I N pa a 1:10 aa av. iuie Lua4 tee. Miuflw..,.,e lit! aa ili:M Pa tICRLIKQTOIt 8TAU0.110TU A H4I01 Chicego, BarllngtOa A Itnlney. Lun. Arrlre. Cbico peoial 4 i.m ia e I w pa Chicago Veailkeied liinM a I :w pa 1 1:4 ia Chicago Local a tut am aU:W) pm Ckic(o Uailtad a I'M pa a 7:44 pa Vaat Mall t:M pa Kauaaa City, St. Joseph at C. Uluffa. Kanaaa Uty Dajr Kpra a :U am a'uJia Ui Loula f.tmi t :4 la all: am Kaaaaa city Nlibl Kxpraaa alu:4 pa a 4 a aa Uarllaajtaa A Mteeoavt Rlvv. Wraara, Baatrlea aad Wacola. .a r am bll 91 pm Nabraaka ICuraas ....a 1:4 aa 1:44 pa Deafer lamacd a 4:1 pm a 4.i aui black Bill 4 Pusai towaa Bx.aU.lu pia a 4:i pa Caierade Vaakibalad 4ir, a l:M pa Uoceln Paat atal .. 1:4! pa all:ua ym ton Creoa and Haiumautk....b 1:11 pa bl:a aa ballarue aad faoiac Juetiee...e liae pa a a. aa 4Mllua aad racina Jncuua...a l:4U aa WBBBTEat DBFOT 1BTH 4B WEBSTER Sllaaosivt PaelS. teere. ArrtT. Ma. Leaal. tm Welg Watar.b 4:14 sa ma pa rfclaaa-a, St. Past, Mlaat. A Omaaa. Twin citr paaaensar.. I SO aa b 1 11 pm aioax uuj -aaaasr. Oakland Local ..a l:4 pa alliM a ..kill pa k 1:14 a a bally Saturday. b bally aacapt tvnday. pally eaeapt Meaday. d Dally OCBAW TEAkltHIPg, C2:.:?ag::ss tkiun ' TSANSATLANTIOUC rreneh Una, New York to Paris, Six Bays,' Walling Every Thursday at 10 a. ss La Lorralna Jua 4 La Campasae....Jant II La Uaaoogaa...... June II La Lorralna ....,.Julr T La Bavole - June II. L Caacoina ....-July 14 Naw, amodara, gigaatl twla-sorow and axpraaa alaamarsi naval emoara aan-o-var dlaolpliua, Itonipany'a vaatleulad traiaa, Mar-rl 4 bourt. AsralaHarry H. Moons, 1HU r.naa k., Laal rteaaa, rirat . Nat l Baak, O. A. Halkaitora, UU Parana tu. Soak lalaad y- 4. ; . 4JCHOB UNB V, a. sTAIb (TSAMIIUPB. SW rORK, LONDONDalRkV AMV OLAtOOW. KBW TORK. OIBkALTAB AND NAPLBa. fapartar aeaemmodatlona. aeallaat entalna. Tka eaaUert at paaaanaere earafully eonaldarad. Blaala ar round trip tickets batwaoa Naw Tors and tootca, gnsliali,' Irlak aad all principal sandlnaTlaa aad aautliiantal paints at attraotlva rataa. Sand for Bona at Tours. Far tlckala er ganaral Intoraatlea aoalp Is atiT Ix-al atant tka Anchor Liu er t MgNUgaaON BKOg., Caa'l AVtata, (.-Mease, alt. I LEGAL MOTICB, NOrtCES-SAI-E OK CITT REAL ESTATE. Notloe Is hereby given that sealed pro posals will be received at th City Clerk's olflce, room 10t City Hall. Omaha, Ne braska, for the purchase of a fifteen-foot trip adjoining lot t. block H6, City, on the north, and th twenty-foot strip ad Joining lot 8, block 244, City, on the eaat; Surchase of real estate," and must he led on or before Tuesday, May 11. J904. at t o'clock p, m,, at which time all bids will be opened. Th City of Omaha reserve th right to reject any or all bids. -Omaha, May IS, Uoi. W. hTelBOURN, City Clerk. ' MJJ-29 Bath Tabs mt Glass. . No longer can th cleanly, hygienic porce lain bathtub be reckoned th leader In bathtubs, for this essential household req uisite ha now a rival an importation from Germany. This latest development In bath tubs it of glass, thiok plat glass, and molded in one piece. Of courso. in th home of the very wealthy there are bath tubs of much mors costly material than plat glass, but this newest comer la de signed for ordinary use, the lime ai th porcelain type. Ther ar not very many glaai tuba obtalnapl yet, but those '.hat hav arrived ar attracting attention, par ticularly from femlnln observer, for th glass looks o bright and clean and fresh. These glass tuba ar mounted In th samt fashion a those of porcelaln.-Brooklyn Etglo. II WHAT HAVE YOU BEEN LOOKING FOR? wuu lot, FROM WOO TO 1800, Buy one of these Lots and Build a Home of four own, Fine view, Don't delay, : , - - . I 717 1 $ v t u I & Thes prloee r ft(a are tyxlM f-t biiJr,2IU,hl- tlhi'.?".? e1r"i,".w" big slga 1 on th ground showing th HAGTirJCG Cl HEYDEN, 6IO-I0U fj. Y. CH1SMMP0 AS JAPAN'S BASE toes, of Amlt-ity Around th Corto ltpot of toppl et. PREPARATIONS FOR LONG OCCUPANCY Mlkada'e Men MaV Ready for War that Will Laat for Many Months aad Do It Well. (Copyright by New York Herald Co., 1?04.) CHINNAMPO, Core. April il.-(rrom a Special Correspondent of th New York Herald Special to The Bee.) Now becomes apparent something of what the quiet men who are busy all day and far into the night In their offices In Toklo are accomplishing for the success of th war they ar making with rosla. In those day which now seem no far off, when they had always a pleasant smile for th newspaper men who were pestering them for permission to go to the front and time to step to talk to us in explanation of why wa could not yet get away, it not Infrequently teemed that surely th greater part of their work was fencing us off. The first glimpse of Chln nampo was enough to rectify that error, but it take a full day her to get the true rafige of all that Is going on and to see something of the scale on which th Japanese are preparing for their contest. Activity Is evident everywhere, and, as usual under such circumstances, there seems to be much confusion. But Just as when the men on one of our warships ran belter skelter hither and yon at the ound ot the call to quartern, ther la under the surface tumult and lack of order a system and a controlling idea which bring about the orderly desired result In the shortest possible time. Chlnnampo lie on the right bonk of th great Taidong river, a few miles from Its mouth. It Is squatted among the hill, with th foreign concessions ocoupylng the only fairly level space on th river front. If one bars the broad mud fiat that stretches for twenty acres or more directly In front of the main street Back of the foreign concession I huddled a Corean village, and separated from the concession by a steep hill another native village lies down the river bank. These villages tipply most bf th coolies, who work all day and sometimes far Into the night hust ling about the raat quantities of military tore of on sort nd another that pass through Chlnnampo, or busy In th timber yards scattered all about getting out boards for ua of the Japanese army, Chlnnampo as tbe Main Bate, It Is evident at one that for th pres ent at leaat Chlnnampo is the main base 4f th army. Th preparation already mad seem to Indicate that the Japanese expect to -occupy It aa such for a long time to com. Ac the campaign goes On, It It develops that they secure unobstructed control of the Corean gulf, om port further north, Anju or perhaps even Yong ampito, may be made the base. Already Anju la being used a a supplementary base, aa much ot tbe material that cornea up here in the larger transports ia trans shipped her into smaller craft and for warded to Anju by water, instead ot tak ing th long, difficult and uncertain Journey overland. The settlements and th river front vl with each other In preaentlng scene of greatest aotlvlty, Wherever ther Is an open space It I occupied either by heaps of stores or by a little lumber yard, where gang of low moving but plodding Co nans ar sawing Into boards th hug timber that ar discharged from sohoon er and lighters along th river front or In th small creek that winds down thrmgh the mud flat to th river. All Jong th river iront ther ar rcores of sampans and larger lighter mixed in with ohooner and barges, and out In the stream ther 1 a steady procession of transports. Th steam vessel range all th way from 100 to several thousand tons, and they com and go at th rat of half a doxen a day. Since I hav been here there hay never been fewer than twelve in th harbor, and It seems at if no two consecu tive tallies of them, apart, numbered ex actly the aame ship. Night and day they com and so. Th evening panorama ot the river 1 never the same as th morning. They com In loaded with every kind of material that can be used by an army. They go away empty or with some of th am material reahlpped for disembarkation further north, a little nearer to th actual seen of conflict. For already, a you who it at the other end of the cables must hav known som time ago, the Japanese oc cupy WUu, the last Corean town on thl id of th Yalu river, th wide, ugly stream that separates them from Man churia, t Loagr Warehouses Ball. From Anju to Wlju the distance is about 130 mile. That must be covered on land, at leaat until there 1 strong enough occu pation of Wlju and Yongampho to make the latter place secure enough aa a storage plac for uppli. Only th smaller ves sels can get up to Anju, and so Chlnnampo is likely to continue to be th main base until the Japanese arm hav been suffi ciently successful to transfer the whole scene of this sort of activity across the Ltao Tung peninsula to Nw Chwang or lomt other port. Scattered throughout th settlement and In several sheltered spot among th hills th Japanese hav erected no fewer than thirty long warehouses, some of which they ar now using for temporary bar racks. Only a few of these ar filled with stores at present, many of thm having nothing more In them than th hug tim bers which cover tot ground, and which IN A GOOD, LOCATION. HERE IT IS IN THAT HAS JUST BEEN PLATTED. I ' I ' ra I jjF ' , I , f . I . I f I, M m ZuVt Street $ rf a Ad s fi y I I I I ' ss n tr " 5 ft I . I 1 I I . I , Jo , 4J-t Jin'!!?- Tf?, PRICES, S500, SSSO. S600AND S6SO. tw to t lees than any other lot offered for aale that are ao Urge, eloa In, and located as well. Moat IhlS Ifl Dart of iht od exrMiMlrlnn arnnnd known aa tha FtlnA rr--,. m,h .v.- ,..-., - i,...... "unt ac- tal, and let us show you tb pltt. will boob b wd up Into board for th erection ot other godowns. Two o them, a little way out on one of the sld roads, ar stored with ammunition, and th gen try posted near warns passersby not to smoke for that reason. Th sign pst4 on th wall near th door of each specifies the kind of ammunition and th corr for which It I destined. Only th amount Is not thus placarded for th benefit of him who may read Japanese. Heaped beside the road that leads up to the settlement from the main landing there Is another huge pit of ammunition guarded by two sentries, both of whom leaped at m with rifles threateningly raised when I hap pened to put my hand on my camera ss I passed. Nearer the beach there Is another pile, whose lees vigilant sentry waa so In terested tn the working of th camera that he failed to notice the direction In which It wa pointed. But Inasmuch as that pile was covered with a great tarpaulin It might as well hav bean a heap of bean s far as the photograph wa concerned. Qnantltlea ( Poataoa. Then ther are pontoon. It would seem that the Japanese expect to cross every river In all the world many times, bo many of theao Iron boat sections have they taken north already or stacked up on th beach here. In several places about the settle ment there are long rows of them. For ach division of th Japanese army on mobilization there Is a battalion of three Companies of engineers,- on of which Is organised Into two bridging sections. All the men In this eompany hav been In structed In bridge building. On section carries a bridge 106 yards and th other one of forty yards. The pontoons are of Iron, twenty-four feet long and four feet one Inch wide. Each pontoon Is divided for purposes of transportation Into six sec tions, which ar riveted together when put Into plac. Each half of th completed pontoon Is separately buoyant and the whole has a buoyancy of a little more than 1,500 pounds. The whole pontoon weighs, complete, 750 pounds. For overland trans portation two sections are packed on one pony, or one section and a coll of rope. A curious feature Of the Japanese pontoon Is that th roadway Is only three feet nine inches wide, where their field gun tracks four feet on inch. There ar pontoons enough now In Chlnnampo to construct several long bridges, a they ar placed a little mor than three feet apart In con structing a bridge, and already very many of them hav gone north overland. Wheeled Cart Difficulty. ' They told us repeatedly at headquarter In Toklo that there would be no wheeled transportation of any sort with tbe army. They guv that aa a reason why we could not have carts for our own transportation, although w mad It distinctly clear that we did not,, ask them to furnish us th carts, but .only to give us permission to buy them for ourselves and to run them in the field. There are now piled up In different places In and about Chlnnampo several hundred of the two-wheeled carts used by the transportation corps, both the hand carts and thos Intended to be pulled by a pony. W are told here that hun dreds of these carts have already gone on to Ping Yang and north from there. Un questionably the roads are bad. The frost haa been a long time In getting out of th ground, and th Corean soil, which la largely a clayey formttlon, Is the kind that makes a fin, rich, stldky mud, through whloh it Is extremely difficult, for th wheels to run. But there Is enough sand In It so that a good sunshine dries It up quickly, and from now on jt about two months the going ought to be fairly good. Then the rains will come on and for three months there will be water in plenty. Last year In northern Corea ther was a rain fall during th month of August of seventy two Inches. Th Americans who have hilcsd through the Philippines In spite of th rain and mud, even when it wa deep enough to pull th shoes oft th feet of the horses as they went through It, were In clined to take with a large grain of salt the Japanese talk of th difficulties of th road up her when the rains set in, but there wa never a month with seventy-two inches of precipitation In th Philippines, and th on that w got forty-eight w thought w had had plenty to last for all time. It must be said that th Japanese ar managing their water transportation her very well. They hav an Immense flock of sampans, brought over from Japan, and with their own boatmen to handle them. These sampans are larger than th ones mostly In us about th Japanese coast towns, and ar naw and strongly made. Each Is marked on each side with a num ber and the amount of cargo It will take. Many of them ar marked "Four horses or fourteen men." But as matttr -of fact they put twenty-eight men Into on sam pan in landing them from th transports. The transportation corps brought great number of coolies from Japan, but has employed her very ' many more. The Corean cooli la a much better packer than th Japanese. I have seen sevepvl times six or eight Japanese rtruggllng slong under th load of a, big timber which four Corean picked up and walked away with as easily as if It were nothing. Piers and (tampans. Three piers -hav been constructed tem porarily. They ar solidly made and take good loads. From th water edge a float Of sampans leads several yards farther out Into th river, forming a landing stage. There la also a makeshift pier of stone laid down In th mud, which serve when th tide I low. At night th sampan II a lltti way off shore, and this evening I aw mora than a hundred of them, by actual count, going to their anchorage in a long flock, th boatmen singing and shouting after their day' work. Ther 1 a great reserve of th larger sampan kept on th mud up next the seawall, end one la a whil whan ther Is need for on II OUR NEW BLUFF' VIEW ADDITION Easy Terms, High Ground, Fared Streets, Water & Sewer Ride to the Heart of the city. ? lots, or go out and look at thn. Our Llfo Dldg, Tel. IGOO a vU is L of them a hundred men or mor will take oft their ahoes, get down Into the mud and haul It out to th accompaniment of a great hu and cry. By mean of ail the sampan cargo Is discharged very quickly and In ah orderly manner. Tbe beau com up to one or the other of the pier In rapid succession, but ther are men enough to clear away their load quickly and get them out of the way of the next In turn. Wher th higher ground n which th settlement stand joins th mud flat ther is a little depression In which water stands over from the high tide. Barges, sam pans, and now and then a schooner, ar taken up on the flood and loaded on th ebb from th pile of stores along th shore. Then on th next flood they ar taken out and sailed or towed to Anju. This evening I saw a small steamer going out. It had been taking In supplies very busily during th afternoon, and ther wer a few soldiers on board. It had In tow a dozen or fifteen big sampans, all bound for Anju. Th godowns for stores and th bar rack are roughly but well made'of boards, with roofs of corrugated Iron Imported from , th United States. Few of them nra Coored. I saw only one that wa. In thos that are used for stores th goods ar piled upon timber laid crosswise of th building. In tbe barrack th soldier sleep on mats thrown on the ground. There r several wells scattered about th settlement, and th soldier are digging more. Th water Is clear and seems fairly good, but the army takes the precaution of boiling all that Is drunk by the soldier. A big American Iron windmill lies near on of the wells ready to be set up. Near th landing place there are a dosen huge tanks for water, the exact purpos of which did not appear. Vary Few Troop I ft. There ar very few troops In Chlnnampo. Three or four of the hills that surround the settlement ar occupied a camps by artillerymen and their horses, and today two transoort cam In with Infantry on board. Soma of these men were debarked here and others wer held on board, per haps to go on to Anju tomorrow. Th men are debarked by companies, and as each sampan load scrambles up th pier they march tip to the end and form up to wait for their comrades, marching up to their quarter eompany by company. The artillerymen who are In camp are kept busy all day helping th men of th transportation corps In th work of dis charging the cargoes of the incoming trans ports. They marched back to headquarters for their noonday meal In company forma tion, with a noncommissioned officer stalk ing along beside the column Intoning a war song which the whol crowds howl out after him with evident satisfaction. Thus everything goes smoothly, rapidly and In good order. Th smoothness Is such that it would b quit easy to be completely fooled as to the seal on which the work (s going forward If one wer hot to pay particular attention. But walk obout the place for a little while and not the tnergy with which the work goe on, pnd see how th scene constantly shifts, and you eannot help having It born In upon you how great 1 the preparation going forward here. The quiet men In Toklo ave doing a vast work. It Is no small army for which all this work Is undertaken, nor is it for a short campaign or on of mall importance ' Whatever th plans of th Japanese may be th evidence her la that they or of wide scop. . It the rest of the work Is done with the lame thoroughness and energy a that shown here it will take something mor than promises to render it useless. "The attack," said General Fukushlma to me one day during the preparation for the march of the relief column from Tien Tsln to Peking In the Boxer outbreak, "th attack, that Is easy. It Is the behind work that is difficult." It is the "behind work" that Is going on so well here In Chlnnampo. We shall see very soon now whether this ts an in dication of how comparatively easy Is the attack. OSCAR KINO DAVIS. I BISiaiSKKBSKKKSSSCKXIISBIKa lly Stay Home from the E 1 A few votes will bring you a trip to the World's Fair at St. Louis in 1 The Bee Exposition "Elections." Get your friends to help you. It doesn't take much work to get votes, AH you have to do i$ to tell your friends you want their votes and they will gladly help you. Remember, you get 520 votes on each yearly Omaha subscription 600 outside of Omaha. t RULES OF THE "ELECTION- The ten persons receiving tne largest number of votes at the close of each '"election" will be furnished, . at The Bee's expense, as prizes, each a free trip from Omaha to St. Louis and return, to be taken any time during the exposition. No restrictions nre placed as to where the party lives as a candidate for one of the exposition trips. No votes will be counted for employes or agents of The Bee. All vptes must be made on coupons which will bo published each day In The Bee. Prepayment of subscriptions may be made either direct to The Bee Publishing Company or to an author Ized agent of The Bee. No votes sent in by agents will be counted unless sent in In accordance with instructions given them. The vote from day to day will be published In all editions of The Bee. Tho "election" will close each Saturday at 3 p. m. Votes may be deposited at the business office of The Bee or sent by mail. No votes sent by mail will be counted which are not in the Omaha postofflce for dellv ery at 2:30 p. m. on the day of closing. ' ADDRESS Exposition Dept., Omaha Daily Dee. Coupon fgt 2- OMAHA, NEB. XZZBZBUZ8Z2SXXSKBBEXBKZ8BBBSSXlSSXSZSS2:S:zrZ.rr.r.Zxi OUT OF THE ORDISARY. Twelve hundred working permits hav been Issued for children between the age ot 14 and 14 yenra by parents) In Milwaukee, in almost every instance on account of the fat her e being addicted to the uae of in toxicants, Fawtticket. R. 1., has four undertaking eetabllehmenta, each of which ia No. 14 upon Its street. On of th "funeral par lors ' Is conducted by a man named Berry, whloh. If not spelled th sum way, aounds exactly like "bury." In one of these estah. liahmunta a young man by the name ft Coffin secured a position aome yer ago. Ilia flrat work wa In connection with thir teen victim of a alflghlng Tarty run into bv a train while rroeeing the railroad track near the city. And yet there are some people, otherwise of sound sense, who say there Is nothing futal In the number thir teen. "Down In the Indian Territory recently I cam across a new phase of the tippling habit,'' said M. li. Arthur of Cincinnati, quoted by the Washington Post. "It I agalnat the law of the territory to ssll any Intoxlcania, and the expedient that era tr sorterl to are startling to a man who has been used tn free traffic In rum. A druggist at one of the beat towns in the territory told ma that his sale of perfumery and red Ink has been Immense, and that a great pert of these llqulda were taken as people ordinarily uae beer Or whlaky. I my sell saw a half breed loss off a glass halt full ot red ink and imack his lips with an air as expressive of satisfaction as though It had been a nip of th best rye or bourbon.- An occular demonstration of th Darwin Ian theory Is shown In th person of ait infant at the Deaconess hospital In St. Loiila, where th Ineuhatora are tempor arily housed. So striking waa the reaem. blanoe ot the baby tu a clilmpansee that th riurses unanimously named her Emily Dar win. Her faoe la wrinkled end drawn and her feet have the power of gruaping thing much more atrongly ths-n the averaKe baby. Iter little hands are scarcely larger than a man's thumb nail and her wrist is about the slxe of a lead pencil. When the btthlts re brought to the Incubator only tholr first names are placed on the gilntorles, which are filled out as tn the case ot a hospital patient. Some of them have no flrat namea even, and th btirae supply the deficiency. Besides Emily Darwin, som of the names given the children are Daniel Deronda and Felix Holt, the latter being called because of his radical tendencies. He Is a kicker and throws off his coverings. His Incubator will soon be ready for an other ocotipant and Felix will be graduated Into full babyhood. K. D. Urquhart of Lynohburg, Vs., has destroyed aa many bed as tttimeon did Philistine. He Is t feet t Inches -tall and weighs between toO and 400 pounds. When asked what he did fur sleeping arrange ments, Mr. Urquhart said: 1 broke down , four beda In one night over In North Caro lina several year ago. As a rule, though, I do not hav much trouble. I never have any at all when 1 stop at good hotel, but on th night when 1 broke down four beds 1 wa stopping at th hotel of a man who wanted to reaiAse about 600 per eent on hi Investment. He had four beak In one room, and he assigned me to that room. Ther wer not muny persons at th hotel that night, or I possibly would not have broken down all the beds. It he had had oppor tunity ha would have given me a room mate, put no ulci rr I. I went up, ana nooui thirty minutes after I got In bed all th slats fell from beneath me, and I got up and crawled Into bed No. t. It lasted a Utile longer than the flrat one, but at laat it went the same way, and the two others were gone before 1 o clock in the morning. I always havs trouble at cheap hotels," h continued with a sigh, as h measured h.ls titanio proportions with Vila eye. EDUCATIONAL MOTES. The late John Lortz ha left $40,000 4a Wilson college, Cliamuersburg, Pa., to be used for the erection and maintenance of a natural scleno building. The women of Havana, 111., discounte nance domestic science, practical garden work and athletics In the public schools and eleot director opposed to suob Innova tions. Dr. Grant-Showerman, now asajstant pro feasor of Latin In the University of Wis consin, has been called to the chair of Latin at Princeton for th next college . year. Prof.' Alfred I P, Denni of Bowdoln university has acoepted an associate pro fessorship In history at the University of Chloago. Ha Is a graduate of Harvard and Princeton universities, Chao Chow, the son of Wu Ting Fang, former minister from China to the United Btatea, who has been taking a course In th Atlantlo City High school, Is announced as having taken the highest honors In the graduating class, and will be valedictorian. Young Wu will take a eours In roedloJn at the University of Pennsylvania and be gin his studies next fall. . , Prof. Melville Thurston Cook of the de- ' partment ot biology of D Pauw univer sity, Greenoastle, lnd., has aocepted a post, tlon with the Cuban government as chief plant' pathologlet, and It carried with It the supervision of all experimental work on plant disease which ar Injurious to agriculture. KSB BBSBSXXIIKSSBKBSBSMSXJI Koosition? i k J